Abstract

Background and Objective:Numerical simulations in electrocardiology are often affected by various uncertainties inherited from the lack of precise knowledge regarding input values including those related to the cardiac cell model, domain geometry, and boundary or initial conditions used in the mathematical modeling. Conventional techniques for uncertainty quantification in modeling electrical activities of the heart encounter significant challenges, primarily due to the high computational costs associated with fine temporal and spatial scales. Additionally, the need for numerous model evaluations to quantify ubiquitous uncertainties increases the computational challenges even further. Methods:In the present study, we propose a non-intrusive surrogate model to perform uncertainty quantification and global sensitivity analysis in cardiac electrophysiology models. The proposed method combines an unsupervised machine learning technique with the polynomial chaos expansion to reconstruct a surrogate model for the propagation and quantification of uncertainties in the electrical activity of the heart. The proposed methodology not only accurately quantifies uncertainties at a very low computational cost but more importantly, it captures the targeted quantity of interest as either the whole spatial field or the whole temporal period. In order to perform sensitivity analysis, aggregated Sobol indices are estimated directly from the spectral mode of the polynomial chaos expansion. Results:We conduct Uncertainty Quantification (UQ) and global Sensitivity Analysis (SA) considering both spatial and temporal variations, rather than limiting the analysis to specific Quantities of Interest (QoIs). To assess the comprehensive performance of our methodology in simulating cardiac electrical activity, we utilize the monodomain model. Additionally, sensitivity analysis is performed on the parameters of the Mitchell-Schaeffer cell model. Conclusions:Unlike conventional techniques for uncertainty quantification in modeling electrical activities, the proposed methodology performs at a low computational cost the sensitivity analysis on the cardiac electrical activity parameters. The results are fully reproducible and easily accessible, while the proposed reduced-order model represents a significant contribution to enhancing global sensitivity analysis in cardiac electrophysiology.

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